Dying Birds Rain On Eola

Startled Visitors To The Orlando Park Saw The Fowls Suddenly Fall In Midflight.

Birds fell dead from the trees and sky around downtown Orlando's Lake Eola Park on Friday, stunning residents out for an evening stroll and leaving officials struggling to find an explanation.

Nearly 100 birds began dropping from trees or even falling in midflight about 6 p.m. in the popular park on the east side of downtown. Most were grackles and pigeons, but at least one duck was found dead. Egrets and Lake Eola's famous black swans did not appear affected.

Park rangers made announcements warning hundreds of people gathered for the evening's MoviEola outdoor film feature, Chicken Run, not to touch the birds. Workers with gloves were busy putting the birds into bags and trash bins, and they planned to put the carcasses on ice to preserve them for necropsies.

Experts were baffled by the deaths.

WEST NILE TESTS

Health officials said the birds will be tested for West Nile virus, which is carried by birds and can be transmitted to humans via mosquito bites. The disease has spread south into Florida, infecting two people. In 1999, it was blamed for a large die-off of crows in New York, near where it was first documented in the United States.

The virus has not yet been found in dead birds tested in Orange County in recent weeks but is expected to spread through the state.

Ron Hardee of the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center of Central Florida said he had been to several conferences recently where experts had warned about scenarios similar to Friday night's incident at Lake Eola as being a possible indicator of West Nile virus.

Friday's bird kill appeared localized. There were no other unusual reports of dead birds elsewhere downtown or in the city, officials said.

People strolling around the lake were shocked by the sight of the birds' sudden deaths.

"I didn't know what was going on," said Ruth Vlahakes, 26, who walked briskly with her sister, Sarah. "I knew something was weird. I saw a bird, then she saw one, then there was another one, and another one. Every time we went around we saw another dead bird."

Passers-by watched a city worker in a green uniform and latex gloves walk slowly around the lake loading dead birds into a large garbage bag. It was nearly half full.

TRASH PAIL FILLED

So was the tall white trash pail that another gloved worker was filling. He remained stationary near the amphitheater. Enough birds fell within a few steps of where he was positioned that he didn't have to walk far. They dropped and he waited. He nudged a few to see if they were dead yet, and then into the bin they went.

"I know that's abnormal behavior for a bird," said Corrine Suhm, who had just walked out of Panera Bread on the park's east side when she and her husband noticed a black bird lying on its side slowly flexing its wings.

"How sad," she said, as the bird suddenly went still. "This is terrible."

DODGED FALLING BIRD

Jeremy Zeedyk, 21, was standing at the lake shooting a photo of Orlando's signature water fountain when a bird nearly struck his head.

"Whoa! Did you see that?" said a baffled Zeedyk, who was in Orlando for a few days with his Navy crew. "I didn't know we had to wear hardhats here."

Some were disturbed.

Anelsa Rivera, 24, ran up to a park ranger with her husband, Thomas, and 2-year-old girl, Ariana, in tow. Her family had come to the lake with a box of crackers to feed the birds.

"There's a black bird dying over there, and I think his little legs are broken," Rivera told the ranger, who explained that "for some strange reason, birds are falling out of the sky and we don't know why."

Ron Barna, the park manager, said although there have been occasional deaths of ducks and other water birds, he had never heard of land birds dying in large numbers as they did Friday.

Barna said city employees planned to keep on ice at least one bird of each type that died. On Monday, those birds will be sent to county environmental control officials for necropsies.

Bill Toth, Orange County's head of diseases and their causes, said in recent days pigeons had died in a similar manner. Those birds had been sent to Kissimmee for necropsies, he said, but county officials had not received the results yet.

During the past several months, Toth said, county health officials had submitted dozens of dead crows and blue jays for examination, and none had been infected with the West Nile virus.

Terry McElroy, a spokesman for the state Department of Agriculture in Tallahassee, said his agency also had not heard of the West Nile virus appearing in Orange County.

"But the expectation is that this will ultimately spread throughout the state," McElroy said.